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Born in Oxford. Brought up in Oxford. My Mum taught Media A-level and my Dad Writes books for the BFI.

Sunday 23 January 2011

Despite the newsreel opening 'This Is England' has a ver similar narrative and characters to our opening '12 Hours'. In theory it has a similar target audience, young people, to our film. Its because of this i believe they could both be put in the Genre of Coming Of Age. The link between the films is established by how the protagonist is of a similar age, ethnicity and background (location too is not dissimilar). The opening shot, post newsreel, is very similar with subtitles also being placed in the bottom half of the screen. However the openings will differ in the way the opening shot is established because unlike 'This Is England', '12 Hours' is set 12 hours after the very very opening of our film.
Another clear links comes in the form of the mise-en-scene of Shaun's (TIE) room with that of Joshua's (12H), both rooms are shown to be scruffy,unorganised and in a sense creating a stereotypical boy of that age. Camera shots are massively similar, for instance the establish shot at 4:25 though to 4:33 are a long shot to medium this is unlikely to be down to the reasoning on genre but more so that of conventions on a film opening. Narrative itself for the openings is similar because it represent the awakening of a teen, almost metaphorically establishing the fact both young teens are awakening for childhood to adulthood this allows the target audience to in turn relate to the protagonist. Overall i think both openings represent the awkward young person stage of life, no longer a child but not yet an adult, this is done by use of establishing shots that allow the protagonist to move toward the camera (moving towards adulthood) and mise-en-scene that fits in with stereotypical representation of that specific age and gender (scruffy and boyish teen).

Sans- Serif Vs Serif.

Nearly all fonts can be divided into two groups, Serif and Sans- Serif. There is one basic difference that can divine a font from these groups this is the curves at the end of each letter, Know as 'feet. For example a Sans-Serif font such as 'Arial' has no feet however a Serif font such as 'Courier' does have the 'feet' at on each letter.
The reason behind the difference is so that one may be able to use it for different purposes in turn also defining the purpose or perhaps formality of a text. As an example if one is writing a document that you’ll print out and give to someone to read you should use a Serif. Whereas if one is sending an email or writing a blog entry you should use a Sans-Serif font this is because its clearer and easier to read.